4.7 Article

Clinical and Economic Effects of Widespread Rapid Testing to Decrease SARS-CoV-2 Transmission

Journal

ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 174, Issue 6, Pages 803-+

Publisher

AMER COLL PHYSICIANS
DOI: 10.7326/M21-0510

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse [R37DA015612]
  2. National Institutes of Health

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The study suggests that high-frequency home testing for SARS-CoV-2 with an inexpensive, imperfect test can reduce infections, deaths, and hospitalizations at justifiable cost.
Background:The value of frequent, rapid testing to reduce community transmission of SARS-CoV-2 is poorly understood. Objective: To define performance standards and predict the clinical, epidemiologic, and economic outcomes of nationwide, home-based antigen testing. Design: A simple compartmental epidemic model that estimated viral transmission, portrayed disease progression, and forecast resource use, with and without testing. Data Sources: Parameter values and ranges as informed by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidance and published literature. Target Population: U.S. population. Time Horizon: 60 days Perspective: Societal; costs included testing, inpatient care, and lost workdays. Intervention: Home-based SARS-CoV-2 antigen testing. Outcome Measures: Cumulative infections and deaths, number of persons isolated and hospitalized, and total costs. Results of Base-Case Analysis: Without a testing intervention, the model anticipates 11.6 million infections, 119 000 deaths, and $10.1 billion in costs ($6.5 billion in inpatient care and $3.5 billion in lost productivity) over a 60-day horizon. Weekly availability of testing would avert 2.8 million infections and 15 700 deaths, increasing costs by $22.3 billion. Lower inpatient outlays ($5.9 billion) would partially offset additional testing expenditures ($12.5 billion) and workdays lost ($14.0 billion), yielding incremental cost-effectiveness ratios of $7890 per infection averted and $1 430 000 per death averted. Results of Sensitivity Analysis: Outcome estimates vary widely under different behavioral assumptions and testing frequencies. However, key findings persist across all scenarios, with large reductions in infections, mortality, and hospitalizations. Costs per death averted are roughly an order of magnitude lower than commonly accepted willingness-topay values per statistical life saved ($5 to $17 million). Limitations: Analysis was restricted to at-home testing. There are uncertainties concerning test performance. Conclusion: High-frequency home testing for SARS-CoV-2 with an inexpensive, imperfect test could contribute to pandemic control at justifiable cost and warrants consideration as part of a national containment strategy.

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